Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Mississippian Women

View through CrossRef
This volume highlights how women were powerful farmers, economic decision-makers, spiritual leaders, and agents of social integration in the diverse societies of the Mississippian world, which spanned the present-day United States South to the Midwest before the seventeenth century. While Mississippian societies are some of the most well-researched pre-European contact societies on the continent, little attention has been dedicated specifically to Mississippian women. These chapters offer new insights into the vital role women played within their communities, an approach directly informed by the powerful position of American Indian women within contemporary American Indian communities. Contributors examine themes such as identity, labor, grieving, cooking, craft production, spatial organization, prestige, morbidity, kinship, and fertility. Case studies include sites throughout the Mississippian world, ranging from Illinois to Florida, including Cahokia and Moundville. Mississippian Women is the first volume to focus solely on the political, social, and economic power of women during this period, linking their actions in building their culture before European colonialism with the work of Indigenous women in the region today.
University Press of Florida
Title: Mississippian Women
Description:
This volume highlights how women were powerful farmers, economic decision-makers, spiritual leaders, and agents of social integration in the diverse societies of the Mississippian world, which spanned the present-day United States South to the Midwest before the seventeenth century.
While Mississippian societies are some of the most well-researched pre-European contact societies on the continent, little attention has been dedicated specifically to Mississippian women.
These chapters offer new insights into the vital role women played within their communities, an approach directly informed by the powerful position of American Indian women within contemporary American Indian communities.
Contributors examine themes such as identity, labor, grieving, cooking, craft production, spatial organization, prestige, morbidity, kinship, and fertility.
Case studies include sites throughout the Mississippian world, ranging from Illinois to Florida, including Cahokia and Moundville.
 Mississippian Women is the first volume to focus solely on the political, social, and economic power of women during this period, linking their actions in building their culture before European colonialism with the work of Indigenous women in the region today.

Related Results

Gender, Craft Production, and Emerging Power in Mississippian Hierarchical Societies
Gender, Craft Production, and Emerging Power in Mississippian Hierarchical Societies
The control of craft specialization is used in hierarchical societies to both attain and maintain power. For example, in the Mississippian world shell bead production at Cahokia an...
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Photo by niu niu on Unsplash ABSTRACT Shackling prisoners has been implemented as standard procedure when transporting prisoners in labor and during childbirth. This procedure ensu...
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
Photo by Hédi Benyounes on Unsplash ABSTRACT The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers of adequate care cruci...
Learning About and From Mississippian Women
Learning About and From Mississippian Women
The chapters in this volume demonstrate that Mississippian women were influential in most, if not all, aspects of their communities. Recognition of the significance of women’s role...
The Mississippian of west-central New Mexico
The Mississippian of west-central New Mexico
Mississippian rocks were studied in detail in the Ladron, Lemitar, and Magdalena Mountains, and Coyote Hills, of west-central New Mexico. The oldest Mississippian strata in this ar...
The Current State of (Mississippian) Women
The Current State of (Mississippian) Women
Though our understanding of the late precontact and early post–European contact Mississippian societies continues to develop, one important point has become clear—during this preco...
Zero to hero
Zero to hero
Western images of Japan tell a seemingly incongruous story of love, sex and marriage – one full of contradictions and conflicting moral codes. We sometimes hear intriguing stories ...
Carboniferous of the Eastern Interior Basin
Carboniferous of the Eastern Interior Basin
The Carboniferous rocks of the Eastern Interior basin reach a maximum thickness of 5,700 ft., and the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian subdivisions are separated by a major widespre...

Back to Top